Food neophobia, food choice and the details of cultured meat acceptance

Meat Sci. 2022 Dec:194:108964. doi: 10.1016/j.meatsci.2022.108964. Epub 2022 Sep 9.

Abstract

This study focuses on the details of consumer response to lab grown 'cultured meat (CM)', compared to meat derived from insects, plants and animals. A sample of 254 New Zealanders were interviewed. A word association exercise revealed that consumer reaction to CM was dominated by affective, rather than cognitive factors. The linkages between a general food neophobia scale, a specific CM evaluation scale and purchase intent were studied. The general neophobia scale performed poorly as a predictor, while the 19-point CM evaluation scale performed well. Reducing this scale to its seven affective components, and then to just the two key affective components did not significantly reduce the scale's predictive performance. Overall, the results of this research reveal very significant differences in preference for meat products based upon their origins. Insect protein was strongly disfavoured over all alternatives, while cultured meat was significantly disfavoured compared to more established alternatives. The implications of this for the commercialisation of CM are discussed.

Keywords: Affective; Clean meat; Cultured meat; Food ethics and sustainability; Food neophobia; Food perceptions; Low involvement; Scale.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder*
  • Consumer Behavior
  • Food Preferences / psychology
  • Humans
  • Intention
  • Meat
  • Meat Products*